“Gracias por sus buenos deseos, chicos. Estoy bien. No fue tan malo como se veía. Me estoy recuperando rápidamente. Fue una experiencia increíble”, escribió la actriz luego del incidente.
Sin embargo, luego de un post de Palm Beach Post, se supo que esta escena fue preparada y por lo tanto falsa con la intencion de convertirse en viral para la pagina pornografica Camsoda.
Un homenaje a Mijail Gorbachov, último gobernante de la desintegrada Unión Soviética. Durante su gobierno, él impulsó una profundas reformas políticas y socioeconómicas pro-capitalistas conocidas como “Perestroika” y “Glasnot”, cuyo objetivo era la apertura, reconciliación y adaptación de Rusia con el capitalismo. El logro de ese objetivo significó la caída de la Unión Soviética y “la cortina de acero”, y el nacimiento de una era unipolar con los Estados Unidos a la cabeza.
Como es su cumpleaños, lo celebramos a ritmo de “Gorbachov” por el grupo Locomia. La canción es un mix de ritmo soviético-latino, cantado por españoles vestidos de toreros con un estilo ultrabarroco quienes, además, son todo unos capos con los abanicos.
WASHINGTON — Journalists from The New York Times and several other news organizations were prohibited from attending a briefing by President Trump’s press secretary on Friday, a highly unusual breach of relations between the White House and its press corps.
Reporters from The Times, BuzzFeed News, CNN, The Los Angeles Times and Politico were not allowed to enter the West Wing office of the press secretary, Sean M. Spicer, for the scheduled briefing. Aides to Mr. Spicer only allowed in reporters from a handpicked group of news organizations that, the White House said, had been previously confirmed.
Those organizations included Breitbart News, the One America News Network and The Washington Times, all with conservative leanings. Journalists from ABC, CBS, The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, and Fox News also attended.
Reporters from Time magazine and The Associated Press, who were set to be allowed in, chose not to attend the briefing in protest of the White House’s actions.
“Nothing like this has ever happened at the White House in our long history of covering multiple administrations of different parties,” Dean Baquet, the executive editor of The Times, said in a statement. “We strongly protest the exclusion of The New York Times and the other news organizations. Free media access to a transparent government is obviously of crucial national interest.”
The White House Correspondents’ Association, which represents the press corps, quickly rebuked the White House’s actions.
“The W.H.C.A. board is protesting strongly against how today’s gaggle is being handled by the White House,” the association president, Jeff Mason, said in a statement. “We encourage the organizations that were allowed in to share the material with others in the press corps who were not. The board will be discussing this further with White House staff.”
The White House move came hours after Mr. Trump delivered a slashing attack on the news media in a speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference. The president denounced news organizations as “dishonest” purveyors of “fake news” and mocked journalists for claiming free speech rights.
“They always bring up the First Amendment,” Mr. Trump said to cheers.
A White House spokeswoman, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, played down the events in an email on Friday afternoon.
“We invited the pool so everyone was represented,” Ms. Sanders wrote. “We decided to add a couple of additional people beyond the pool. Nothing more than that.”
Mr. Spicer’s small-group Friday session, known as a gaggle, was scheduled as a no-camera event, less formal than his usual briefings that are carried live on cable news. But past administrations have not hand-selected outlets that can attend such sessions.
“It was clear that they let in a lot of news outlets with less reach who are Trump-friendly,” said Noah Bierman, a White House reporter for The Los Angeles Times, who was barred. “They let in almost every network but CNN. That’s concerning, the handpicking aspect of it.”
Two of the barred outlets, CNN and The Times, have been a particular focus of Mr. Trump’s ire. And during the presidential campaign, some journalists from BuzzFeed News and Politico were prohibited from attending Trump rallies.
Representatives of the barred news organizations made clear that they believed the White House’s actions on Friday were punitive.
“Apparently this is how they retaliate when you report facts they don’t like,” CNN said in a statement.
Ben Smith, editor in chief of BuzzFeed, called it “the White House’s apparent attempt to punish news outlets whose coverage it does not like.”
After enduring an unusually bitter confirmation battle for a sitting U.S. senator, Jeff Sessions will barely have time to settle into his fifth-floor office at the Justice Department before he takes center stage in some of the nation’s most acute controversies.
Sessions was approved 52 to 47 on Wednesday night after a prolonged fight, in a vote largely down party lines. Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia was the only Democrat who supported him. Sessions voted present.
With too few votes to block the nomination, Senate Democrats slow-walked the confirmation, staging a dramatic overnight session Tuesday after Republicans silenced Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), preventing her from reading decades-old criticism of Sessions from Coretta Scott King, the widow of slain civil rights leader the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
Even House Democrats, who have no vote on the confirmation, joined in protest Wednesday evening in the Senate chamber.
At the Justice Department, Sessions will be responsible for leading the legal defense of President Trump’s immigration restrictions, for halting and investigating terrorist attacks, and for investigating hate crimes and abuses by local and state law enforcement.
He also is expected to play a key role in implementing Trump’s promised crackdown on illegal immigration by increasing deportations.
His boss isn’t making things easier. Last weekend, Trump denounced a federal judge in Seattle who had temporarily blocked Trump’s executive order suspending immigration and refugees from seven Muslim-majority countries.
A three-judge panel from the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco heard arguments Tuesday on the government’s effort to lift the stay. The judges did not issue an immediate ruling, and Trump complained Wednesday that the legal process was taking too long.
“You could be a lawyer, or you don’t have to be a lawyer. If you were a good student in high school or a bad student in high school, you can understand this, and it’s really incredible to me that we have a court case that’s going on so long,” Trump told a law enforcement chiefs’ conference in Washington.
The legal battle over the travel ban is expected to wind up in the U.S. Supreme Court.
Sessions “is in a tight spot, that is for sure,” said John Hudak, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank. “He has a tough job for a whole panoply of reasons.”
Sessions was first elected to the Senate from Alabama in 1996, and served two decades on the Judiciary Committee, which reviews federal judges and conducts oversight of the Justice Department.
But in a staunchly partisan era, his confirmation hearings quickly broke on party lines. In the end, he did not receive a single vote from Democrats on the committee.
Supporters say Sessions is uniquely qualified to lead the Justice Department in such a turbulent time.
Pointing to his 12 years as U.S. attorney in Alabama, and two years as state attorney general, they said Sessions has the experience to prosecute criminals, make policy decisions and aggressively tackle illegal immigration.
They described him as personable and courteous, traits that led him to be generally well regarded in the Senate, and could help him win over career Justice Department lawyers.
“He is serious about both the law and the department, and with his background he is uniquely equipped to handle the job,” said Michael B. Mukasey, who served as attorney general under President George W. Bush and who testified in support of Sessions’ nomination. “I suspect the learning curve won’t be too steep for him.”
Democrats and civil rights groups worry that Sessions’ conservative record on civil rights, voting rights and environmental laws portends trouble.
They also are concerned that such an ardent Trump advocate — Sessions was one of Trump’s earliest and most enthusiastic campaign surrogates — will oversee the reported federal investigation into potential ties between the Trump campaign and the Russian government.
U.S. intelligence agencies last month issued a report that concluded Russian intelligence agencies launched cyberattacks against Democratic Party officials and took other measures aimed at influencing American voters to support Trump.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, and other Democrats have questioned whether Sessions can be trusted to enforce the law, especially if potential investigative targets are in the White House.
“It is very difficult to reconcile for me the independence and objectivity necessary for the position of attorney general with the partisanship this nominee has demonstrated,” Feinstein said to explain why she voted against Sessions’ nomination in the Judiciary Committee.
Sessions has said he won’t be afraid to tell Trump he is wrong or that a planned action is unconstitutional. An attorney general has “to be able to say no, both for the country, for the legal system and for the president, to avoid situations that are not acceptable. I understand that duty,” Sessions testified.
Legal experts and former Justice Department officials said Sessions would have a difficult task. Trump is used to getting his way. He also has expressed expansive views of presidential authority that worry even the most conservative legal scholars.
John Yoo, a law professor at UC Berkeley who served in the Justice Department in the George W. Bush administration, said Sessions would have to combat those presidential impulses while retaining Trump’s trust — a task that Yoo likened to walking a tightrope.
“If you are too far from the president, you will get cut out of the decision-making process and you are not doing your job as attorney general,” said Yoo, who recently wrote in the New York Times that he had concerns about Trump’s use of presidential authority.
While in the Justice Department, Yoo was a vocal advocate for a muscular executive branch. He wrote the so-called torture memos that gave the Bush administration the legal authority to approve the CIA’s use of “enhanced interrogation” of suspected terrorists, including waterboarding.
“On the other hand,” Yoo added, “someone has to tell the president that what he is doing is illegal or unconstitutional, even when Trump’s instincts and his political advisors are pushing for it. Sessions is the only person in the administration now who can do that, tell the president no. We will have to see how that plays out.”
In contrast, Yoo said James B. Comey, the FBI director, has little political capital.
In July, Comey publicly announced that no charges would be filed against Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton for her email practices as secretary of State, infuriating Republicans. Then, about a week before the November election, he announced the FBI was reviewing newly discovered emails, astonishing Democrats.
The last-minute disclosure threw the presidential race into chaos, and even though Comey said several days later that the review had ended with no change in the bureau’s conclusion in the Clinton case, Democrats blamed Comey for tipping the election in Trump’s favor.
Sessions had no role in that controversy, but he may have to deal with its aftermath. Comey’s actions — and others taken by the Justice Department in the email inquiry — are under investigation by the Justice Department’s inspector general.
The outcome of that inquiry “could be very messy,” Yoo said. “Suppose it determines that Comey acted improperly and made bad decisions. The natural question then is, should he be replaced? Whatever the decision, it is going to be unpopular.”
Sessions can expect a frosty reception from some staffers at the Justice Department, particularly those in the civil rights and environmental units, which expect their broad authority under the Obama administration to be curtailed. Lawyers in other divisions said they didn’t expect much to change.
Despite the uneasiness, lawyers at the Justice Department said they were pleased with early White House choices for key department posts.
In particular, they cited the selection of Rod Rosenstein, a longtime Justice Department lawyer who has served as U.S. attorney in Maryland in both Republican and Democratic administrations, to be deputy attorney general.
“Rod is a great pick,” said David O’Neil, a former top Justice Department official in the Obama administration, echoing comments of current lawyers. “He is as institutional as they come. He has a lot of integrity.”
Ex presidente Alan García recibe latigazos por parte de Jesús por ponerlo como imagen de la corrupción en el Morro Solar de Chorrillos. Gracias ODEBRECHT. Imagen: Facebook
Alan García y su campaña presidencial 2016. Imagen: Facebook.
Memorex para el pueblo: Ex-presidente Alan García (Der.) junto a Fernando Barrios (Izq.), el ex funcionario al salir del puesto se indemnizó a si mismo por “despido arbitrario” cuando dejó el puesto de presidente de ESSALUD para asumir un ministerio (además que el puesto es de funcionario de libre designación y remoción). Pendexazo! Después de un “sorprendente” acto de honestidad (en verdad fue el foco público y el escándalo) devolvió el dinero a las arcas del Estado que sostienen todos los ciudadanos con sus impuestos. Ver: http://elcomercio.pe/politica/gobierno/fernando-barrios-habria-cobrado-90-mil-soles-despido-arbitrario-cuando-dejo-essalud-noticia-673340
Donald Trump señaló que los periodistas están entre las personas más “deshonestas del mundo”.
El primer fin de semana de Donald Trump como presidente de EE.UU. comenzó con una confrontación abierta con los medios de comunicación de su país.
Funcionarios de su gobierno se enfrascaron en una guerra de palabras y cifras desde el sábado, cuando el propio Trump condenó la cobertura que los medios habían hecho de su toma de posesión el día anterior.
Y la disputa fue por la cantidad de asistentes, a partir de la publicación de dos fotos que contrastaban la asistencia de público en la ceremonia del viernes y a la de Barack Obama en 2009.
En las imágenes se evidenciaba que la asunción de Obama había convocado a mucha más gente a las calles de Washington DC que la de Trump.
Después del contundente mensaje de Trump contra la cobertura mediática, el jefe de gabinete de la Casa Blanca (uno de los cargos más importantes del gobierno), Reince Priebus, dijo: “Frente a esa obsesión por deslegitimar a este presidente, no vamos a sentarnos y dejarlo pasar“.
“Este gobierno va a luchar con dientes y uñas, todos los días, contra este intento de deslegitimar las elecciones “, le dijo Priebus a la cadena Fox el domingo.
Luego vino el cruce de opiniones sobre cifras precisas de público, dado que no se difunde un numero oficial tras la ceremonia de toma de posesión.
Durante una visita a la Agencia Central de Inteligencia (CIA, por sus siglas en inglés) el sábado, Trump dijo que “parecían como un millón y medio de personas” las que habían llegado al National Mall, pero dio evidencia alguna que respaldara su afirmación.
Y calificó a los periodistas de algunas de “las personas más deshonestas del planeta” por publicar que habían sido muchas menos.
https://youtu.be/8llFHHAkGcw
Por su parte, el secretario de Prensa de la Casa Blanca, Sean Spicer, dijo que unas 720.000 personas se habían reunido el acto de asunción de Trump, pero también aclaró que “nadie” tenía los datos exactos de asistencia.
Los medios de comunicación reaccionaron.
The New York Times denunció que las reclamos de la Casa Blanca se basaban en “datos falsos” y agregó que eran “una llamativa exhibición de inventiva y agravios en el inicio de una presidencia”.
Algunas cadenas estadounidenses como CNN y ABC consultaron registros históricos para refutar una a una las afirmaciones de Spicer.
“Hechos alternativos”
Pero tal vez la frase más controvertida en medio del debate entre Trump y los medios de comunicación de EE.UU. la dijo la consejera del gobierno Kellyanne Conway durante un programa de la cadenal NBC el domingo.
Cuando el presentador del programa Meet the press (“Encuentro con la prensa”),Chuck Todd le dijo a Conway que la presentación de Spicer había estado “llena de falsedades”, ella respondió:
“Si nos vamos a referir en esos términos a nuestro secretario de prensa, creo que vamos a tener que replantear nuestra posición en este programa”.
Pero el presentador insistió en cuestionar a Spicer sobre los datos de la asistencia en la toma de posesión.
La posesión de Donald Trump este viernes (izq.) y la de Barack Obama en 2009 (der.). Ambas imágenes fueron tomadas desde el obelisco que se conoce como el monumento a Washington.
“Él lo que hizo fue presentar hechos alternativos. No hay manera de contar las personas dentro de una multitud con exactitud”, concluyó.
La noción de “hechos alternativos” esbozada por Conway fue duramente cuestionada.
“Los hechos alternativos no son hechos. Son falsedades“, le replicó Todd.
A la vez, la asesora también citó otro hecho que generó fricción con los medios, cuando un reportero de la revista Time publicó de forma incorrecta que el busto del líder de los derechos civiles Martin Luther King había sido retirado de la Oficina Oval, donde funciona el despacho del presidente de EE.UU.
El reportero ya pidió disculpas por el error.
Fin de semana lleno de anuncios
Conway le dijo a la cadena CBS que las 20 millones de personas que dependen de la cobertura médica conocida como “Obamacare” no se van a quedar sin atención durante la transición a un nuevo plan.
Y agregó que Trump no va a entregar su declaración de impuestos.
El jefe de gabinete, Reince Priebis, afirmó que la primera semana de Trump en el gobierno estará enfocada en temas de comercio, inmigración y seguridad nacional.
El jefe de prensa, Sean Spicer, dijo que el presidente Trump se iba a reunir con su par de México, Enrique Peña Nieto, el 31 de enero y con la primera ministra británica, Theresa May, este jueves.
Varios medios de comunicación en Estados Unidos rechazaron la confrontación verbal con la Casa Blanca.
The Washington Post señaló que las “falsedades mostradas por la Casa Blanca evidencian que la tradicional manera de cubrir noticias sobre el presidente ha muerto”.
Y agregó que, de ahora en adelante, los medios deberían ponerle menos atención a comunicados oficiales y, en vez de eso, enfocarse en investigaciones de fondo sobre la administración Trump.
La revista The Atlantic también mostró su preocupación por lo ocurrido y señaló en un editorial: “Si estás dispuesto a mentir sobre algo así de minúsculo, ¿por qué alguien debería creer lo que digas sobre algo grande e importante?”.
kellyanne conway El jefe de personal de la Casa Blanca, Reince Priebus (der.), dijo que las noticias sobre la asistencia a la posesión de Donald Trump era un intento de “deslegitimar este presidente”.
Otro medio importante, Politico, llamó la atención sobre las graves consecuencias que tendría que el equipo de Trump continuara “teniendo una relación inestable y difícil con la verdad” y citando al senador demócrata Adam Schiff señalaron que eso “podría poner muchas vidas en riesgo”.
“Este lenguaje combativo también se podría extender a temas importantes de gobierno y de seguridad nacional… lo que preocupa a muchos “, agregó el medio.
Otros datos
La batalla con las cifras no se redujo a la cantidad de asistentes al National Mall el pasado viernes 20 de enero.
El domingo Trump escribió en una de sus cuentas de Twitter (@realDonaldTrump) que la audiencia en televisión de la ceremonia de posesión había sido de 31 millones de personas, casi 11 millones más que las que vieron el segundo juramento de Barack Obama en 2013.
Sin embargo, esos datos – que fueron entregados por la firma Nielsen– son menores a los de 38 millones de personas que se pegaron al televisor para ver la asunción de Obama en 2009 y aún menos que los 42 millones que observaron la posesión de Ronald Reagan, en 1981.
Estas cifras siembran más dudas sobre la frase del secretario de Prensa de la Casa Blanca, quien dijo que “había sido la posesión con mayor audiencia en la historia”.
Pero más allá de la batalla con los medios, Trump hizo también referencia a las multitudinarias marchas por los derechos de las mujeres y en contra de su gobierno que se realizaron en más de 600 localidades del país al día siguiente de su asunción.
“Estoy bajo la impresión de que acabamos de tener una elección, ¿por qué toda esta gente no votó?”, escribió en Twitter.
Más tarde, sin embargo, escribió: “Las protestas pacíficas son un sello de calidad de nuestra democracia“.
WASHINGTON — America, and the world, just found out what “America First” means.
President Trump could have used his inaugural address to define one of the touchstone phrases of his campaign in the most inclusive way, arguing, as did many of his predecessors, that as the world’s greatest superpower rises, its partners will also prosper.
Instead, he chose a dark, hard-line alternative, one that appeared to herald the end of a 70-year American experiment to shape a world that would be eager to follow its lead. In Mr. Trump’s vision, America’s new strategy is to win every transaction and confrontation.Gone are the days, he said, when America extended its defensive umbrella without compensation, or spent billions to try to lift the fortune of foreign nations, with no easy-to-measure strategic benefits for the United States.
“From this day forward, it’s going to be only America first,” he said, in a line that resonated around the world as soon as he uttered it from the steps of the Capitol. “We must protect our borders from the ravages of other countries making our products, stealing our companies and destroying our jobs.”
The United States, he said, will no longer subsidize “the armies of other countries while allowing for the very sad depletion of our military.”
While all American presidents pledge to defend America’s interests first — that is the core of the presidential oath — presidents of both parties since the end of World War II have wrapped that effort in an expansion of the liberal democratic order. Until today, American policy has been a complete rejection of the America First rallying cry that the famed flier Charles Lindbergh championed when, in the late 1930s, he became one of the most prominent voices to keep the United States out of Europe’s wars, even if it meant abandoning the country’s closest allies.
Mr. Trump has rejected comparisons with the earlier movement, with its taint of Nazism and anti-Semitism.
After World War II, the United States buried the Lindbergh vision of America First. The United Nations was born in San Francisco and raised on the East River of Manhattan, an ambitious, if still unfulfilled, experiment in shaping a liberal order. Lifting the vanquished nations of World War II into democratic allies was the idea behind the Marshall Plan, the creation of the World Bank and institutions to spread American aid, technology and expertise around the world. And NATO was created to instill a commitment to common defense, though Mr. Trump has accurately observed that nearly seven decades later, many of its member nations do not pull their weight.
Mr. Trump’s defiant address made abundantly clear that his threat to pull out of those institutions, if they continue to take advantage of the United States’ willingness to subsidize them, could soon be translated into policy. All those decades of generosity, he said, punching the air for emphasis, had turned America into a loser.
“We’ve made other countries rich,” he said, “while the wealth, strength and confidence of our country has disappeared over the horizon.”The American middle class has suffered the most, he said, finding its slice of the American dream “redistributed across the entire world.”
To those who helped build that global order, Mr. Trump’s vow was at best shortsighted. “Truman and Acheson, and everyone who followed, based our policy on a ‘world-first,’ not an ‘America-first,’ basis,” said Richard N. Haass, whose new book, “A World in Disarray,” argues that a more granular, short-term view of American interests will ultimately fail.
“A narrow America First posture will prompt other countries to pursue an equally narrow, independent foreign policy,” he said after Mr. Trump’s speech, “which will diminish U.S. influence and detract from global prosperity.”
To Mr. Trump and his supporters, it is just that view that put America on the slippery slope to obsolescence. As a builder of buildings, Mr. Trump’s return on investment has been easily measurable. So it is unsurprising that he would grade America’s performance on a scorecard in which he totals up wins and losses.
Curiously, among the skeptics are his own appointees. His nominee for defense secretary, Gen. James N. Mattis, strongly defended the importance of NATO during his confirmation hearing. Both Rex W. Tillerson, the nominee for secretary of state, and Nikki R. Haley, the choice for ambassador to the United Nations, offered up paeans to the need for robust American alliances, though Mr. Tillerson periodically tacked back to concepts echoing Mr. Trump’s.
And there is a question about whether the exact meaning of America First will continue to evolve in Mr. Trump’s mind.
He first talked about it in a March interview with The New York Times, when asked whether that phrase was a good summation of his foreign-policy views.
He thought for a moment. Then he agreed with this reporter’s summation of Mr. Trump’s message that the world had been “freeloading off of us for many years” and that he fundamentally mistrusted many foreigners, both adversaries and some allies.
“Correct,” he responded. Then he added, in his staccato style: “Not isolationist. I’m not isolationist, but I am ‘America First.’ So I like the expression.” He soon began using it at almost every rally.
In another interview with The Times, on the eve of the Republican National Convention, he offered a refinement. He said he did not mean for the slogan to be taken the way Lindbergh meant it. “It was used as a brand-new, very modern term,” he said. “Meaning we are going to take care of this country first before we worry about everybody else in the world.”
As Walter Russell Mead, a professor at Bard College and a scholar at the conservative Hudson Institute, put it the other day, “The fact that he doesn’t have a grounding in the prior use of the term is liberating.”
“If you said to the average American voter, ‘Do you think it’s the job of the president to put America first,’ they say, ‘Yes, that’s the job.’”
But Mr. Mead said that formulation disregarded the reality that “sometimes to achieve American interests, you have to work cooperatively with other countries.” And any such acknowledgment was missing from Mr. Trump’s speech on Friday.
Mr. Trump cast America’s new role in the world as one of an aggrieved superpower, not a power intent on changing the globe. There was no condemnation of authoritarianism or fascism, no clarion call to defend human rights around the world — one of the commitments that John F. Kennedy made in his famed address, delivered 56 years ago to the day, to protect human rights “at home and around the world.”
That was, of course, the prelude to Kennedy’s most famous line: that America would “bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty.”
But the America that elected Mr. Trump had concluded that it was no longer willing to bear that burden — or even to make the spread of democracy the mission of the nation, as George W. Bush, who was sitting behind Mr. Trump, vowed 12 years ago. Mr. Trump views American democracy as a fine import for those who like it.
“We do not seek to impose our way of life on anyone,” he said, “but rather to let it shine as an example for everyone to follow.”